Driving In: What's Allowed Now
Whether you can drive into the village right now or must park and walk, where the car parks are and what they cost, plus the winter and White Road realities — checked live against the clock.
Whether you can drive into the village right now or must park and walk, where the car parks are and what they cost, plus the winter and White Road realities — checked live against the clock.
Almost everyone comes to Shirakawa-gō by car or coach, and the one thing that catches visitors out is when — and whether — you can drive into the village itself. This checks the rule against the clock right now.
Saturday 20 June
You can drive into the village right now
Vehicles are kept out from 9:00 tomorrow.
You can drive into the village now, but the car parks and most shops close around 5 p.m., so there is not long. Please drive at walking pace and remember people live and sleep along these lanes.
Check before you set off
These hours are set by the village and can change — and on a busy day the queues and the parking fill differently. This is a living community, not an attraction with gates. Check the official page below for the live parking webcams and the current rules before you travel.
SHIRAKAWA-Going — live parking webcams and visitor info — the official portal; its cameras show how full the car parks are right now
Open 8:00–17:00. Last admission 16:30. · Closed now
Getting in on foot: about a five-minute walk into the village, over the Deai suspension bridge across the Shōkawa river
Booking: Cars do not need to book. From 1 December 2026, coaches must reserve a bus space at the Seseragi (Oro) lot in advance — bookings opened on 1 June 2026.
Residents, and visitors with a booking at a village guesthouse (minshuku), may drive in — ask your host how to arrange it.
Usually open 1 June to 10 November.
A 33 km scenic toll road over the mountains between Shirakawa-gō and Hakusan in Ishikawa. It is closed all winter for snow and the exact opening shifts each year, but it usually runs the full length from around mid-June to 10 November. Daily hours are roughly 7 a.m.–6 p.m. in summer and 8 a.m.–5 p.m. in autumn; the toll is about ¥1,700 for a standard car. It is not a winter route into the village.
Ogimachi is a lived-in village of about 1,500 people, not a museum. The village brought in the daytime traffic ban in 2014 because cars and coaches on the narrow lanes made it hard, and unsafe, for residents to go about an ordinary day. Parking at the edge and walking in keeps the lanes clear for the people who live here.
The streets are calmest before about 9 a.m. and after the last coaches leave in the late afternoon. Coming early or late is the kindest time for residents — and you will have the thatched roofs and the views nearly to yourself.
From about the start of December to the end of March the roads in and around Shirakawa-gō are snowbound — this is some of the heaviest snow country in Japan. Winter tyres or chains are required. Allow far more time than a map suggests, and check the road and expressway conditions before you set out.
You cannot drive a private car up to the Shiroyama viewpoint that looks down over the thatched roofs. It is about a 15-minute walk up, or a paid shuttle bus (about ¥300 each way) runs roughly every 20 minutes between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Source: Shirakawa Village and the Shirakawa-gō Tourist Association, checked 20 June 2026.